Welcome to the Next Level

Posted on Jul 24th 2009 at 01:00:01 AM by (logical123)
Posted under Overview, Civilization, 4, PC, Gaming, Overview, First, Impression, Revolution

08753123132130001.jpgSome games are there for you to have fun. Some, to make you think. Others, like in Civilization IV, are both fun, and stretch the old noodle, in addition to being highly addictive. Warning: If you have an addictive personality, and have not already played a Civilization game, play this at your own risk. I feel it has to potential to eat up thousands of hours of my time, as well as yours.

I used to play Starcraft over 10Mbit LAN with my uncle when I was 7, him on his Sony Vaio, and I on an old 66Mhz Pentium MMX. Those were my first dabbles in the foray of the Strategy genre. I liked it, but I liked just spending time with my uncle more than playing the game. I didn't understand all the concepts either, which explains why I always lost. A while back, I found a download for a converted to run on OSX copy of Civilization II. Again, I liked it, but not a whole lot. It was primitive to me, and it didn't capture my attention.

However, recently, I was lent a copy of Civilization IV: Complete, and installed it on the XP side of dual boot. After getting through the tutorial, I was impressed. Very impressed, I might add. Instantly hooked, too. After only playing the tutorial, I was hooked. Now, if that isn't addictive, I don't know what is.

In Civilization IV, you can lead one of 18 different civilizations, and even more with expansion packs such as Beyond the Sword. You begin the game at the dawn of man, in the year 4000BC, to found your civilization. As the game progresses, you can learn new technologies, found new towns, built world wonders, form armies, and conquer the world. To win at a game of Civ, you either have to 1)have an immense amount of culture (Cultural Victory), 2)Take over all other Civilizations (Conquest/Domination Victory), 3)Build a space ship to Alpha Centauri (Space Race Victory), 4)Have the other players vote you into office in the United Nations (Diplomatic Victory), 5)Having the most points by 2050AD (Time Victory).

One of the reasons why I like it so much is because of the attention to details. Many people can recall that in the Sims franchise, the charaters don't actually talk. They speak in a babble, unintelligible dribble. The same goes for Civilization Revolution. However, in Civ IV, if you are the Russians, they speak Russian, Chinese speaks Chinese, and so forth. AND, if you zoom into one of the ethnic cities, you hear sounds of that type of city in real life. That kind of detail really made me feel as though the designers behind the game really wanted to give the gamer the full experience. Not many games make you feel in such a way, and it made me realize that a video game can still, to this day, be made in an artful and beautiful way. I highly encourage anyone who likes Strategry video games or board games, or even those who don't, to try this game.

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Comments
 
I have played many Civilization games in my time, and I have also found them all addicting. My only major problem with the games is that even though I can play as several different cultures, I find that the level of progression with each is far from realistic. The American culture is a mix of several other cultures, and has only been around for 233 years, but I can choose to play as the Americans and start the game with the Rock and Stick thousands of years prior. No matter which culture I choose, I get the same start and the same chance any other culture gets. 18 different civilizations, and they all play the same with different languages and characters.
 
Well, you get different attributes to each culture, like faster research, or faster builds, etc. Also, you get different starting tech, but I do understand where you are coming from. I love when I found Christianity in 780BC and Islam in 100BC, not very realistic. But, it's a game, so what do you expect?
 
I own the exact same version of that game. Sounds like I need to give it a shot - or not. Tongue
 
I recently got a PC that should be capable of running Civ IV, but I'm afraid of becoming too addicted to it.

I know how addicted I was to Civ Revolution for the 360 when it came out, so I can only imagine how hooked I'd be on Civ IV!

One question...how long does a game typically last? Is it around 3-4 hours or so like Civ Rev or is it a lot longer? I don't want to get into a game that's 20 hours to play 1 time, and to lose that game would suck!
 
Normal is about 2 hours, Epic is 5hours, marathon is 25 or so. There's a quick option but I have yet to try it.
 
Are those different game modes?
 
Yes, you get to choose game speed and difficulty, like Settler, Chieftain, up to Deity.
 
Do the game speeds change anything regarding how it plays?

What I mean is, are there less features available in the Normal and Epic versions than there is in Marathon?
 
@phoenix1967:

No, not really. If you play a faster game, things take less time to build, research, etc.
 
Would you recommend getting the complete CIV 4 that's out there or to just start with the basic CIV 4 game?

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